Peter, Scott & Bill,
Do any of you own a club and operate it as a business? I guess owners and GMs are just morons and we should thank our lucky stars that omnipotent boards can do math
"Cart rentals are not a true profit center for most clubs".
OK?? What evidence do you have for that statement? Any?
"Don't pros still get a piece of every cart rental fee? They have no incentive to encourage walking."
What decade is this notion from??? Maybe, MAYBE years ago a few pros had a percentage of the range, carts, club repair, lessons, etc.....but that comment today shows how out of touch the average golfer is with the industry.
Here are some real quick numbers about some real cart rental income and expenses.
18 hole private course in Atlanta with 72 carts.
Cart income for 2007
(37,000 PAID rounds) $569,000
Cart lease (72 carts)
($68 per cart per month) $58,752
Not a lot of people buy their carts
20,000 square foot clubhouse
average monthly electric bill ($5,000)
AND let's assume 100% of that
goes to carts $60,000
Cart path construction
(asphalt) $350,000 that
say lasts 7 years or so.
I get to depreciate that capital
expense (and operators LOVE
non-cash expenses) $50,000
Let's assume 50k a year for repairs
and path maintnence--VERY HIGH BTW
Cart staff for the year (High school kids at
$8 an hour) $75,000
Total $325,248
Carts make money for a facility.
Remember also that many courses are simply unwalkable for a lot of people. What is the average cost of losing one full member because they can't ride?
Average person stays a member 7 years so at a club with a $7500 initiation fee and monthly dues of $300 and assuming no increases and ZERO usage it xomes to $32,700.00
I know walking is sacrosanct on this site and carts are evil but as someone who had a handicapped father and who sees genuine need for carts among a huge percentage of his members, should we really vilify facilities that make the game MORE ACCESSIBLE to a large group of people??
I would argue that courses that allow walking and particularly those that require caddies actually increase the cost of golf per person and certainly curtail the number of people who even have the chance to play the game.
I'd love to hit the lottery and be able to build a walking only course without cart paths. Yes, they look hideous, detract from how golf was meant to be played and cart revenue certainly has costs that many people don't factor in but, carts are a revenue source for most clubs--not the other way around.
Peter--The surest loser for most clubs is to get rid of carts and "re-decorate the cart barn for a bigger dining room"!! Also, beverage carts are not nearly as profitable (when at all) as people think.